# How to Choose Your Groomsmen: A Calm, Drama-Free Method

> A reliability-over-obligation framework for picking his wedding party — how many, the brother question, and how to honor everyone without causing family drama.

*Published 2026-06-24 · By Nathaniel Cross*

The calm rule in one line
Choose his groomsmen by *closeness and reliability*, not by symmetry or obligation. No one — not a brother, not a future brother-in-law — is owed a spot at the altar; being asked is an honor offered, not a right. Size the party to the wedding (the average is about four per side), and honor everyone else with a real role rather than a reluctant one.

If he is staring at a list of names and quietly dreading who will be hurt, here is the reassurance to lead with: there is no etiquette rule that forces any particular person into the wedding party. The seat beside him is an honor he *offers*, not a debt he *owes*. Once that pressure lifts, choosing groomsmen becomes a calm, almost mechanical exercise — and your job, as the person helping him through it, is mostly to keep him honest about closeness and reliability while you both fend off the family noise.

## How many groomsmen should he actually have?

There is no magic number, only a sensible range. [The Knot](https://www.theknot.com/content/how-to-choose-your-groomsmen) reports that the average wedding party runs to about four attendants per side, and the trend in recent years has been toward smaller, more intentional groups rather than the old "the more the merrier" lineup. The workable band most planners use is two to ten.

Two practical levers set the number more than any rule does. The first is the room: a garden ceremony or loft reception starts to feel crowded with more than four per side, while a grand ballroom carries ten without strain — and more men means a longer photo block. The second is the coordination load. As [Generation Tux](https://generationtux.com/blog/wedding-planning/how-many-groomsmen) notes, every additional groomsman is one more person to chase through suit orders, fittings, and day-of timing. If he is the type who would rather not herd a large group, a tight three or four is not a compromise — it is a gift to his own nerves.

One myth to retire early: the sides do not need to match. An uneven count is invisible at the altar and entirely normal. Chasing symmetry is the single most common way a groom ends up asking someone he barely speaks to anymore, purely to fill a gap.

## Does he have to make his brother a groomsman?

No — and this is the fact worth repeating until it sinks in. [WeddingWire](https://www.weddingwire.com/wedding-ideas/brother-not-best-man) is unambiguous: a brother does not automatically become best man, and a future brother-in-law is not automatically owed a groomsman spot. The role goes to the men he is genuinely closest to.

The honest framework is closeness first, then reliability. If he and his brother are close, including him is the warm and obvious move. If they are not, forcing the spot tends to read as hollow when the photographs are on the wall a decade later. The same applies to your brother: if the two men are friends, lovely; if they are near-strangers, the groom should not have to bump an old friend to seat an in-law he hardly knows.

Family pressure, of course, is real, and the answer is rarely "exclude him outright." It is to offer a *different* honored role — which is where most of the drama quietly dissolves. (More on that below.)

## What actually makes a good groomsman — and a good best man?

The traits that matter are the unglamorous ones: reliability, punctuality, follow-through, and the basic courtesy of answering a message. A groomsman's literal job is to show up — on time, in the right suit, ready to lend a hand. So the man to weight most heavily is the one who has historically been dependable, not necessarily the funniest or the longest-known.

It helps to separate the two roles clearly:

Best man vs. groomsman: who carries what
RoleCore responsibilityChoose for

Best manCoordinates the groomsmen, holds the rings, gives the toast, troubleshoots on the day, oversees the bachelor partyThe steadiest, most organized person in his circle
GroomsmanShows up on time in the right attire, supports the day, participates fullyGenuine closeness plus basic reliability

Framing it this way takes the heat off the brother question entirely. The best-man job belongs to whoever is most capable of running it — sometimes his brother, sometimes his oldest friend. A beloved but chronically late companion can be a groomsman, or honored another way, without being handed the one role that depends on punctuality.

## How does he honor the people who don't make the lineup?

Generously, and on purpose. The men and women who are not in the party are not being rejected; they are being offered the role that genuinely suits them. Strong, real options include giving a ceremony reading, lighting a unity candle, escorting grandparents or the mother of the groom, ushering guests to their seats, or serving as an official witness who signs the marriage license.

The trick is to ask warmly and specifically — "I'd love you to read this passage during the ceremony" lands as an honor; a vague "we ran out of room" lands as a snub. Done with care, these roles often defuse the exact family tension that a smaller party can otherwise create, which is why a thoughtful groom reaches for them before he ever apologizes.

## When should he ask, and what does a proposal cost?

Most grooms extend the ask about nine to ten months before the wedding, giving everyone time to budget for attire and book any travel. A small gift at the proposal is customary. Spend data from [Zola](https://www.zola.com/expert-advice/how-much-should-i-spend-on-a-groomsmen-gift) describes a broad $30 to $100 range per groomsman, and retailer figures land most grooms around the $40 to $50 mark.

There is exactly one firm etiquette point on the gifts, and it is the same principle that governs the whole method: keep them consistent across the group. A showpiece set for the best man beside a token flask for everyone else creates precisely the friction this calm approach is built to avoid. Choose by closeness, screen for reliability, size to the room, honor the rest with real roles, and treat the group evenly — and he will look back on a lineup that still feels right long after the suits go back in the closet.

## Sources

1. [How to Pick Groomsmen, Easily](https://www.theknot.com/content/how-to-choose-your-groomsmen)
2. [How Many Groomsmen Should You Have in Your Wedding?](https://generationtux.com/blog/wedding-planning/how-many-groomsmen)
3. [Does My Brother Have to Be My Best Man?](https://www.weddingwire.com/wedding-ideas/brother-not-best-man)
4. [How Much Should I Spend on a Groomsmen Gift?](https://www.zola.com/expert-advice/how-much-should-i-spend-on-a-groomsmen-gift)
5. [How Much Should You Spend on Groomsmen Gifts?](https://www.groovygroomsmengifts.com/blogs/news/17129217-how-much-do-i-spend-on-groomsmen-gifts)

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Source: https://groomatlas.com/groomsmen/how-to-choose-your-groomsmen
Index: https://groomatlas.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://groomatlas.com/llms-full.txt
